Taking the happy’ out of happy hour

Taking the happy’ out of happy hour

Although Italy has no minimum drinking age, authorities recently sounded an alarm following a perceived rise in youth drinking. Over the summer, several northern Italian cities, including Monza and the aperitif-loving business hub of Milan, banned sales of alcohol to youth under 16 years.   Although the art of

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Thu 08 Oct 2009 12:00 AM

Although Italy
has no minimum drinking age, authorities recently sounded an alarm following a
perceived rise in youth drinking. Over the summer, several northern Italian
cities, including Monza
and the aperitif-loving business hub of Milan,
banned sales of alcohol to youth under 16 years.

 

Although the art of the aperitivo has a long
tradition in Milan, city officials have taken a step further and are now
seeking to limit the city’s famed ‘happy hour’ for adults and youth alike.

 

The crackdown began with a new ordinance that imposes
fines up to 500 euros for those under 16 caught drinking and for those who give
or sell them alcohol.

 

Now, city councilors have launched a citywide campaign
warning against alcohol abuse. Health superintendent Gianpaolo Landi di
Chiavenna says 4,000 posters will go up near bars and restaurants around the
city. ‘In Milan, people drink too early, not only in terms of age but also in
terms of the hour…happy hour is a fun thing to do, to socialize, but the bad
thing about it is that people start drinking at 7-7:30pm’, he said.

 

Landi is also urging bar owners to do their part by
offering, for example, discounts to those who order non-alcoholic drinks during
happy hour.

 

Meanwhile, the bishop’s See in Milan
is organizing Bible readings as an alternative to Milan’s
happy hour in an effort to ‘propose more positive alternatives rather than seek
to limit negative behaviour.’

 

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